By framing this fear inside a hyper-sexualized JAV package, the producers at Madonna have created a paradox. It is both a warning against the adult industry and a product of the adult industry. It says, "Don't trust these people," while simultaneously asking you to pay money to watch the consequences.
The JAV industry has long faced criticism for its "simulated" depiction of sexual coercion. In Japan, these acts are legally required to be consensual and performed with contracts, breaks, and safety words. However, the narrative is one of non-consent. The viewer is invited to be aroused by the heroine’s fear, confusion, and eventual "breaking."
She expects soft lighting, professional cameras, and perhaps a modest paycheck. What she gets is something else entirely.
The phrase "eh malah di genjot" (but instead, I got rammed) is the punchline and the horror. The narrative pivot is abrupt. Within the first 15 minutes of the film, the "photographer" and his "crew" reveal their true intentions. The studio door locks. The lighting rigs now cast sinister shadows. The polite requests to "try something more daring" escalate into physical restraint.
The narrative crux comes at the 60-minute mark: the heroine stops resisting. In the lore of these films, this is sold as "giving in to pleasure." But the title’s unique phrasing—"Malah Di Genjot" (Instead, I got rammed)—retains the passive voice. Things are done to her. She does not become an active participant. Writing an article about JUQ-886 without addressing the ethical dimension is impossible.